2001–02 FA Women's Premier League Cup

The 2001–02 FA Women's Premier League Cup was the 11th staging of the FA Women's Premier League Cup, a knockout competition for England's top 36 women's football clubs.[1][2]

2001–02 FA Women's Premier League Cup
Tournament details
CountryEngland
Final positions
ChampionsFulham
Runners-upBirmingham City

The tournament was won by Fulham, who beat Birmingham City 7–1 in the final.[3][4][5]

Results

edit

Qualifying round

edit
TieHome team (tier)ScoreAway team (tier)Att.
1 Fulham 12–0 Millwall Lionesses
2 Wimbledon 2–0 Coventry

First round

edit
TieHome team (tier)ScoreAway team (tier)Att.
1 Arsenal 8–0 Ipswich Town
2 Barking 6–1 North Notts
3 Berkhamsted Town 0–6 Barry Town
4 Birmingham City 4–0 Barnet
5 Everton 3–1 (a.e.t.) Bristol Rovers
6 Garswood Saints 1–4 Liverpool
7 Ilkeston Town 2–10 Brighton & Hove Albion
8 Langford 2–3 Chelsea
9 Manchester City 0–2 Southampton Saints
10 Oldham Curzon 3–6 (a.e.t.) Sheffield Wednesday
11 Tranmere Rovers 5–1 Newport County
12 Wimbledon 1–2 Bangor City
13 Wolverhampton Wanderers 1–3 Sunderland
14 Aston Villa 2–5 Doncaster Belles
15 Queen’s Park Rangers 0–7 Charlton Athletic
16 Fulham 8–0 Leeds United

Second round

edit
TieHome team (tier)ScoreAway team (tier)Att.
1 Arsenal 8–1 Sunderland
2 Bangor City 0–1 Birmingham City
3 Charlton Athletic 1–5 Fulham
4 Doncaster Belles 5–0 Barking
5 Sheffield Wednesday 1–2 Ilkeston Town
6 Southampton Saints 4–2 Chelsea
7 Tranmere Rovers 0–1 Barry Town
8 Everton 1–0 Liverpool

Quarter-finals

edit
TieHome team (tier)ScoreAway team (tier)Att.
1 Barry Town 2–4 Arsenal
2 Ilkeston Town 0–4 Birmingham City
3 Doncaster Belles 1–3 Everton
4 Fulham 9–1 Southampton Saints

Semi-finals

edit
TieHome team (tier)ScoreAway team (tier)Att.
1 Doncaster Belles 3–4 Birmingham City
2 Fulham 3–2 Arsenal

Final

edit

References

edit
  1. "Trudy seals Barry win". 2001-11-04. Retrieved 2022-12-08.
  2. "Pettersen ends Arsenal's run". the Guardian. 2002-01-17. Retrieved 2022-12-08.
  3. "TheFA.com - Birmingham City 1-7 Fulham". June 7, 2012. Archived from the original on 2012-06-07.
  4. Hall, Max (April 9, 2002). "Football: Blues no match for full-time Fulham". The Birmingham Post.
  5. "Fulham win League Cup". 2002-04-07. Retrieved 2025-06-07.